EP0371114A1 - Shoe cover - Google Patents

Shoe cover

Info

Publication number
EP0371114A1
EP0371114A1 EP89906163A EP89906163A EP0371114A1 EP 0371114 A1 EP0371114 A1 EP 0371114A1 EP 89906163 A EP89906163 A EP 89906163A EP 89906163 A EP89906163 A EP 89906163A EP 0371114 A1 EP0371114 A1 EP 0371114A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
shoe
lobe
pouch
heel
seam
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP89906163A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Robert Leroy Schwab, Jr.
Original Assignee
PRENTICE RAYMOND ROY
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by PRENTICE RAYMOND ROY filed Critical PRENTICE RAYMOND ROY
Publication of EP0371114A1 publication Critical patent/EP0371114A1/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A43FOOTWEAR
    • A43BCHARACTERISTIC FEATURES OF FOOTWEAR; PARTS OF FOOTWEAR
    • A43B3/00Footwear characterised by the shape or the use
    • A43B3/16Overshoes
    • A43B3/20Heel-less overshoes

Definitions

  • This invention relates to covers for shoes and is designed to make it easy and convenient for shoes to be covered in a manner that changes their colour, protects them, and which provides a clean surface, without requiring a whole range of shoes of different colours.
  • a cover for use with a shoe having a sole, a heel and an upper including a toe area, an instep area and a heel area each having internal surfaces and external surfaces; said cover comprising a pouch having a first lobe generally shaped to line the interior surfaces of a shoe, and a second lobe joined to said first lobe and generally shaped to cover the external surfaces of the shoe, said pouch having an opening to receive the heel of the shoe and to permit insertion of the outer surface of the shoe into the second lobe of said pouch.
  • one lobe covers the outside of the shoe and the other lines the inside of the shoe forming a sock liner which has a smooth surface even if the inside of the shoe does not, is comfortable, and holds the lobe which covers the outside of the shoe smoothly in place.
  • the pouch is completely closed except for the opening to receive a shoe heel and the first lobe is desirably continuously joined to the second lobe.
  • This opening in the area surrounding the heel of the shoe allows the toe of the shoe to be inserted into the lobe intended for it, with the remainder of the pouch being pulled over the shoe upper to cover the heel portion or area of the upper so that the opening of the pouch surrounds any heel that the shoe may have.
  • the shoe cover according to the invention may take two basic forms, that is it may be made of a single piece or of two pieces of fabric, preferably stretch fabric.
  • the seams are desirably so arranged that when the cover is installed on a shoe and the wearer is wearing the shoe, the only visible seam is at the back of the heel portion of the upper. However, the same seam continues along the inner surface of the heel portion of the upper and along the centre line of the sole to an area of the inner surface of the sole where the instep of the user is located. The seam then loops around the foot of the user, extending upwardly and forwardly to an area of the inner lobe just within the margin of the shoe upper at the front.
  • seam then extends downwardly and rearwardly to the instep area where it rejoins the seam previously described, so that that portion of the seam is a closed loop.
  • a short additional seam extends toward the toe of the shoe along the inner surface of the shoe upper.
  • the only remaining seam in this version of the invention is a seam along the mid-line of the sole of the shoe outside the shoe extending from the opening around the shoe heel to the toe of the shoe, and entirely hidden by the shoe when the shoe is on the ground.
  • the seams described are quite comfortable for the wearer and with the exception of the seam outside the heel portion of the upper are completely unseen under normal circumstances.
  • the other version of the shoe cover according to the invention uses a single fabric blank from which the entire bi-lobed pouch is formed. Because the pouch is formed of a single piece there are more seams and they are more visible although they are still not intrusive.
  • One seam extends from the opening for the heel along the heel portion of the upper on the outside surface and down the inside surface to the place where the heel of the wearer of the shoe normally rests.
  • Another seam extends from the opening around the heel forwardly generally along the mid-line of the shoe sole on the outside, around the toe, and on the mid-line of the upper past the most forward point of the opening in the shoe upper for the foot of the wearer, along the inside surface of the upper past the toe of the shoe and to an area under the toe of the wearer.
  • This version has one more visible seam than the other version, but fewer seams on the inside surface of the shoe, and may be more comfortable for some wearers.
  • Another difference between the two versions of the shoe cover according to the invention is that the one-piece version must necessarily have a uniform colour or pattern unless the intial form or blank is assembled of multiple pieces. Furthermore, the location of the blank with respect to the pattern may be quite important where there is a pattern. In the two-piece version, because the only visible seam is at the heel, the layout of the pattern on the fabric is less critical even where the fabric is patterned. It would be possible in either embodiment, to produce multi-coloured or multi-pattern shoe covers by introducing additional pieces and seams, and these alternatives fall within the scope of the invention as claimed in this application.
  • Figure 1 is a part-sectional side elevation of a shoe on which one embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention is fitted;
  • Figure 2 is an underneath plan view of the shoe and shoe cover shown in Figure 1 ;
  • Figure 3 is a side view of one embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention showing the shoe cover constructed from a two piece blank;
  • Figure 4 is a plan view of a shoe on which the shoe cover 10 of Figure 3 is fitted; - 5 -
  • Figure 5 is a side view of another embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention made from a one piece blank
  • Figure 6 is a plan view of a shoe on which the shoe cover of Figure 5 is fitted;
  • Figure 7 is a plan view of the one piece blank for the shoe cover of Figures 5 and 6;
  • Figure 8 is a plan view of a two piece blank for the shoe cover of Figures 3 and 4.
  • the shoe cover according to the invention is worn over a shoe 90.
  • the shoe is a lady's shoe and the invention has particular application to a lady's shoe because of the need to match women's costumes quite closely. That need creates a corresponding need to carry a great deal of luggage where the woman in question happens to be a model, who may be expected to have shoes to match a wide variety of clothing, or a traveller who may be carrying a wide variety of clothing.
  • the invention also has application to men.
  • the invention serves a protective function by keeping shoes polished and free from scuffing, and in some circumstances by preventing dirt from reaching the shoe.
  • the shoe cover of the invention may also be used for covering the foot wear of persons about to enter a "clean room" in which the persons who enter must be covered with garments that cannot allow dirt to escape to the work area of the clean room.
  • the shoe 90 has a heel 91, an upper 92, and a sole 95.
  • the shoe upper 92 has a heel portion or area 93, a toe portion or area 94, and a margin 99 around the opening for the .foot of the wearer.
  • the sole 95 has an instep portion or area 96, between the toe end or area 100, and the heel end or area 101.
  • the outer surface of the shoe as a whole is designated 97 and the inner surface of the shoe as a whole is designated 98.
  • the shoe cover according to the invention is constructed to cover the entire outer surface 97 of the shoe 90 with the exception of the heel 91 and the entire inner surface 98 of the shoe 90. Because of the stretch of the fabric and the differences between various shoes, the cover 10 may not enclose all of the outer surface 97 around the heel 91.
  • Figures 3 and 4 show one form of the shoe cover according to the invention and Figure 8 shows the blank which is cut from a piece of material such as stretch fabric or other appropriate material to form the pouch 10 shown in Figures 3 and 4.
  • the pouch 10 is divided generally along a mid-line shown by a dashed line 17 into a first lobe 11 which lines the inside surface 98 of the shoe 90 and a second lobe 12 which covers the exterior surface 97 of the shoe. Dealing first with the second lobe 12, that lobe has an area 14 which covers the toe portion 94 of the shoe upper. Sole area 15 of the pouch 10 covers the outside of the sole 95 of the shoe, from the toe area 100 to the heel area 101, but contains the opening bounded by edge 13 which extends completely around heel 91 when the cover 10 is on a shoe 90. Area 16 of pouch 10 covers the outside of heel area 93 of the shoe upper.
  • Dashed line 17 generally shows the mid-line between the lobe 11 and the lobe 12 of the pouch 10 but also is generally the area which covers the margin 99, the free edge of the shoe upper which defines the opening into which a user places his or her foot.
  • the line 17 thus becomes an edge as shown in Figure 4 which generally corresponds with edge 99 shown in Figure 1.
  • the area 24 lines the toe area 94, area 25 lines the sole area 95, and area 26 lines the heel area 93.
  • the shoe cover 10 is formed from flat pieces of material.
  • the embodiment of Figures 3 and 4 requires two blanks 30 and 40 formed generally as shown in Figure 8.
  • the blank 30 forms the area extending from the instep portion 96 of the sole 95 forwardly and includes portions of inside sole area 25 and inside toe area 24 as best shown in Figure 3.
  • a seam 31 (Fig. 3) joins edges 32.
  • a second seam 33 (Fig.
  • seam 35 which is a continuous loop joins edges 34 and from it seam 35 extends rearwardly from the instep area 96 of sole 95 and the junction where the loop of seam 33 is closed, generally along the mid-line of the inside of the shoe 90 all the way to the rear of sole portion 25 of lobe 11, up the mid-line of the inner heel portion 26, around edge 17 and down the mid-line of the outer area 16 covering heel portion 93, to edge 13 at heel 91 of shoe 90.
  • Seam 35 joins edges 36, respectively, and then edges 37 respectively. Edges 13 on either side of the blank 40 are not at a seam but the edges may be bound if desirable. Edges 38 are joined by seam 39.
  • the shoe cover shown in Figures 5, 6 and 7 differs only in details from the shoe cover shown in Figures 3, 4 and 8. The difference is that a single blank 50 is used to form the entire shoe cover 10. Two edges 13 outline the heel 91 of shoe 90. There is no seam, but the edges 13 may be bound if appropriate.
  • a seam 51 (Fig. 5) joins edges 52 and extends along the mid-lines of regions 16 on the outer surface of heel portion 93 of the upper of shoe 90 and region 26 on the inner surface of heel portion 93 of upper 92 of shoe 90.
  • Seam 53 extends all the way along sole 95 from margin 13 around heel 91 along the mid-line of the sole to toe area 100, along the mid-line of toe portion 94 of upper 92, across imaginary line 17 joining lobe 11 to lobe 12 (which generally follows edge 99 of the opening in upper 92 for the wearer's foot) down the mid-line of area 24 which lines toe area 94 of upper 92, to approximately the point where sole 95 joins upper 92.
  • this seam joins edges 54 and 55 generally at the centre of the sole area 15 and toe area 14 on the outside and then joins edges 56 down the mid-line of area 24 which lines the toe area on the inside of the shoe 90.
  • the blank for the shoe cover of this invention could take other forms, especially if it is desired to achieve a multi-colour or multi-pattern effect.
  • the blank could be divided to use material of different colours or patterns in different areas.
  • the blank or pattern for the fabric to form the shoe cover may have openings in it to expose the shoe beneath for contrast. Openings may also be made by leaving parts of the seam open, particularly seam 53 which extends along the top of the toe area 14 in Figure 6. It would be possible to form edge 55 on each side of Figure 7 in a scalloped, pointed, or wavy form with seam 53 being replaced by tacking at the outermost points to produce an opening or a row of openings for decoration.
  • the material from which the shoe cover is made is a stretchable fabric.
  • the shoe cover may be produced in one or a few basic sizes to fit most shoes. This applies not only to differences in shoe size but to differences in shoe shape as well.
  • the seams are balanced from side to side and by using a stretch fabric minor adjustments in the position of the seams may be made easily to achieve a pleasing result where the purpose is decorative or to achieve a comfortable result regardless of the purpose.
  • a model or a traveller can readily carry a dozen sets of shoe covers in less space than is required for a single pair of shoes.
  • the shoe cover may be made of the same fabric as the costume for a perfect match. If the material of which the shoe cover is made is not resilient or is not fabric, slight adjustments may be made in the contour of the blank to match the contours of a particular shoe style. In many cases non-resilient fabric can be cut on the bias to achieve a resilient effect.
  • a shoe 90 is placed toe first through the opening bounded by margin
  • the lobe 11 is then pushed into the shoe to line the inside of the shoe, and the foot of the wearer of the shoe is inserted into the opening defined by edge 99, which now is covered by the part of the pouch generally defined by the imaginary line 17.
  • the insertion of the foot into the shoe stretches lobe 11 taut and in turn stretches lobe 12 taut around the outside of the shoe.
  • the result is a smooth attractive covering for the outside of the shoe and a comfortable lining inside the shoe.
  • the user may carry many alternate colours, fabrics, etc. of the shoe cover of this invention in minimum space and weight.

Abstract

Un couvre-chaussure comprend une poche (10) fermée exception faite d'une ouverture située au niveau de la région du talon (91) de la chaussure. La poche comporte deux lobes (11, 12), dont l'un couvre l'extérieur de la chaussure (90) et l'autre l'intérieur de la chaussure, lorsque l'on met le couvre-chaussure et que l'on porte la chaussure, afin de permettre un changement rapide et facile d'apparence de la chaussure sans qu'il faille emporter plusieurs paires de chaussures, et afin de protéger les chaussures et de les empêcher de se salir.A shoe cover includes a pocket (10) closed except for an opening at the heel region (91) of the shoe. The pocket has two lobes (11, 12), one of which covers the outside of the shoe (90) and the other the inside of the shoe, when the shoe cover is put on and wears the shoe, in order to allow a quick and easy change in the appearance of the shoe without having to carry several pairs of shoes, and in order to protect the shoes and prevent them from getting dirty.

Description

Title: SHOE COVER
This invention relates to covers for shoes and is designed to make it easy and convenient for shoes to be covered in a manner that changes their colour, protects them, and which provides a clean surface, without requiring a whole range of shoes of different colours.
According to the invention, there is provided a cover for use with a shoe having a sole, a heel and an upper, including a toe area, an instep area and a heel area each having internal surfaces and external surfaces; said cover comprising a pouch having a first lobe generally shaped to line the interior surfaces of a shoe, and a second lobe joined to said first lobe and generally shaped to cover the external surfaces of the shoe, said pouch having an opening to receive the heel of the shoe and to permit insertion of the outer surface of the shoe into the second lobe of said pouch. Thus, with the cover according to the invention, one lobe covers the outside of the shoe and the other lines the inside of the shoe forming a sock liner which has a smooth surface even if the inside of the shoe does not, is comfortable, and holds the lobe which covers the outside of the shoe smoothly in place. Preferably, the pouch is completely closed except for the opening to receive a shoe heel and the first lobe is desirably continuously joined to the second lobe. This opening in the area surrounding the heel of the shoe allows the toe of the shoe to be inserted into the lobe intended for it, with the remainder of the pouch being pulled over the shoe upper to cover the heel portion or area of the upper so that the opening of the pouch surrounds any heel that the shoe may have.
The shoe cover according to the invention may take two basic forms, that is it may be made of a single piece or of two pieces of fabric, preferably stretch fabric. In the case in which the cover is made from two pieces of fabric, the seams are desirably so arranged that when the cover is installed on a shoe and the wearer is wearing the shoe, the only visible seam is at the back of the heel portion of the upper. However, the same seam continues along the inner surface of the heel portion of the upper and along the centre line of the sole to an area of the inner surface of the sole where the instep of the user is located. The seam then loops around the foot of the user, extending upwardly and forwardly to an area of the inner lobe just within the margin of the shoe upper at the front. The seam then extends downwardly and rearwardly to the instep area where it rejoins the seam previously described, so that that portion of the seam is a closed loop. At the point where the seam is at its upper-most and forward-most position a short additional seam extends toward the toe of the shoe along the inner surface of the shoe upper. These seams are so arranged that when the wearer has the cover on the shoe and the shoe on the foot, the seams are all within the shoe against the inner surface, with the exception of the portion of the seam that follows the back of the heel portion of the upper. That portion follows a line where the upper itself normally has a seam and is not at all obvious. The only remaining seam in this version of the invention is a seam along the mid-line of the sole of the shoe outside the shoe extending from the opening around the shoe heel to the toe of the shoe, and entirely hidden by the shoe when the shoe is on the ground. The seams described are quite comfortable for the wearer and with the exception of the seam outside the heel portion of the upper are completely unseen under normal circumstances.
The other version of the shoe cover according to the invention uses a single fabric blank from which the entire bi-lobed pouch is formed. Because the pouch is formed of a single piece there are more seams and they are more visible although they are still not intrusive. One seam extends from the opening for the heel along the heel portion of the upper on the outside surface and down the inside surface to the place where the heel of the wearer of the shoe normally rests. Another seam extends from the opening around the heel forwardly generally along the mid-line of the shoe sole on the outside, around the toe, and on the mid-line of the upper past the most forward point of the opening in the shoe upper for the foot of the wearer, along the inside surface of the upper past the toe of the shoe and to an area under the toe of the wearer. This version has one more visible seam than the other version, but fewer seams on the inside surface of the shoe, and may be more comfortable for some wearers. Another difference between the two versions of the shoe cover according to the invention is that the one-piece version must necessarily have a uniform colour or pattern unless the intial form or blank is assembled of multiple pieces. Furthermore, the location of the blank with respect to the pattern may be quite important where there is a pattern. In the two-piece version, because the only visible seam is at the heel, the layout of the pattern on the fabric is less critical even where the fabric is patterned. It would be possible in either embodiment, to produce multi-coloured or multi-pattern shoe covers by introducing additional pieces and seams, and these alternatives fall within the scope of the invention as claimed in this application.
The invention will now be further described, by way of example, with reference to the drawings, in which:-
Figure 1 is a part-sectional side elevation of a shoe on which one embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention is fitted;
Figure 2 is an underneath plan view of the shoe and shoe cover shown in Figure 1 ;
Figure 3 is a side view of one embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention showing the shoe cover constructed from a two piece blank;
Figure 4 is a plan view of a shoe on which the shoe cover 10 of Figure 3 is fitted; - 5 -
Figure 5 is a side view of another embodiment of a shoe cover according to the invention made from a one piece blank;
Figure 6 is a plan view of a shoe on which the shoe cover of Figure 5 is fitted;
Figure 7 is a plan view of the one piece blank for the shoe cover of Figures 5 and 6; and
Figure 8 is a plan view of a two piece blank for the shoe cover of Figures 3 and 4.
Referring to the drawings and as shown in Figures 1 and 2, the shoe cover according to the invention is worn over a shoe 90. For the purposes of illustration the shoe is a lady's shoe and the invention has particular application to a lady's shoe because of the need to match women's costumes quite closely. That need creates a corresponding need to carry a great deal of luggage where the woman in question happens to be a model, who may be expected to have shoes to match a wide variety of clothing, or a traveller who may be carrying a wide variety of clothing. However, the invention also has application to men. In addition to the uses mentioned the invention serves a protective function by keeping shoes polished and free from scuffing, and in some circumstances by preventing dirt from reaching the shoe. The shoe cover of the invention may also be used for covering the foot wear of persons about to enter a "clean room" in which the persons who enter must be covered with garments that cannot allow dirt to escape to the work area of the clean room. As illustrated in Figures 1 and 2, the shoe 90 has a heel 91, an upper 92, and a sole 95. The shoe upper 92 has a heel portion or area 93, a toe portion or area 94, and a margin 99 around the opening for the .foot of the wearer. The sole 95 has an instep portion or area 96, between the toe end or area 100, and the heel end or area 101. The outer surface of the shoe as a whole is designated 97 and the inner surface of the shoe as a whole is designated 98.
The shoe cover according to the invention is constructed to cover the entire outer surface 97 of the shoe 90 with the exception of the heel 91 and the entire inner surface 98 of the shoe 90. Because of the stretch of the fabric and the differences between various shoes, the cover 10 may not enclose all of the outer surface 97 around the heel 91.
Figures 3 and 4 show one form of the shoe cover according to the invention and Figure 8 shows the blank which is cut from a piece of material such as stretch fabric or other appropriate material to form the pouch 10 shown in Figures 3 and 4.
As shown in Figure 3, the pouch 10 is divided generally along a mid-line shown by a dashed line 17 into a first lobe 11 which lines the inside surface 98 of the shoe 90 and a second lobe 12 which covers the exterior surface 97 of the shoe. Dealing first with the second lobe 12, that lobe has an area 14 which covers the toe portion 94 of the shoe upper. Sole area 15 of the pouch 10 covers the outside of the sole 95 of the shoe, from the toe area 100 to the heel area 101, but contains the opening bounded by edge 13 which extends completely around heel 91 when the cover 10 is on a shoe 90. Area 16 of pouch 10 covers the outside of heel area 93 of the shoe upper. Dashed line 17 generally shows the mid-line between the lobe 11 and the lobe 12 of the pouch 10 but also is generally the area which covers the margin 99, the free edge of the shoe upper which defines the opening into which a user places his or her foot. The line 17 thus becomes an edge as shown in Figure 4 which generally corresponds with edge 99 shown in Figure 1.
Inside the shoe when the cover is fitted, the area 24 lines the toe area 94, area 25 lines the sole area 95, and area 26 lines the heel area 93.
The shoe cover 10 is formed from flat pieces of material. The embodiment of Figures 3 and 4 requires two blanks 30 and 40 formed generally as shown in Figure 8. The blank 30 forms the area extending from the instep portion 96 of the sole 95 forwardly and includes portions of inside sole area 25 and inside toe area 24 as best shown in Figure 3. A seam 31 (Fig. 3) joins edges 32. A second seam 33 (Fig. 3) which is a continuous loop joins edges 34 and from it seam 35 extends rearwardly from the instep area 96 of sole 95 and the junction where the loop of seam 33 is closed, generally along the mid-line of the inside of the shoe 90 all the way to the rear of sole portion 25 of lobe 11, up the mid-line of the inner heel portion 26, around edge 17 and down the mid-line of the outer area 16 covering heel portion 93, to edge 13 at heel 91 of shoe 90. Seam 35 joins edges 36, respectively, and then edges 37 respectively. Edges 13 on either side of the blank 40 are not at a seam but the edges may be bound if desirable. Edges 38 are joined by seam 39.
The shoe cover shown in Figures 5, 6 and 7 differs only in details from the shoe cover shown in Figures 3, 4 and 8. The difference is that a single blank 50 is used to form the entire shoe cover 10. Two edges 13 outline the heel 91 of shoe 90. There is no seam, but the edges 13 may be bound if appropriate. A seam 51 (Fig. 5) joins edges 52 and extends along the mid-lines of regions 16 on the outer surface of heel portion 93 of the upper of shoe 90 and region 26 on the inner surface of heel portion 93 of upper 92 of shoe 90. Seam 53 extends all the way along sole 95 from margin 13 around heel 91 along the mid-line of the sole to toe area 100, along the mid-line of toe portion 94 of upper 92, across imaginary line 17 joining lobe 11 to lobe 12 (which generally follows edge 99 of the opening in upper 92 for the wearer's foot) down the mid-line of area 24 which lines toe area 94 of upper 92, to approximately the point where sole 95 joins upper 92. In Figure 7, this seam joins edges 54 and 55 generally at the centre of the sole area 15 and toe area 14 on the outside and then joins edges 56 down the mid-line of area 24 which lines the toe area on the inside of the shoe 90. Imaginary line 17 shown on Figure 5, which becomes edge 17 in Figure 6, crosses the blank between edges 55 and 56. The blank for the shoe cover of this invention could take other forms, especially if it is desired to achieve a multi-colour or multi-pattern effect. The blank could be divided to use material of different colours or patterns in different areas.
Where the effect desired is decorative rather than protective the blank or pattern for the fabric to form the shoe cover may have openings in it to expose the shoe beneath for contrast. Openings may also be made by leaving parts of the seam open, particularly seam 53 which extends along the top of the toe area 14 in Figure 6. It would be possible to form edge 55 on each side of Figure 7 in a scalloped, pointed, or wavy form with seam 53 being replaced by tacking at the outermost points to produce an opening or a row of openings for decoration.
Preferably, the material from which the shoe cover is made is a stretchable fabric. This offers a number of advantages. The shoe cover may be produced in one or a few basic sizes to fit most shoes. This applies not only to differences in shoe size but to differences in shoe shape as well. In both modifications shown, the seams are balanced from side to side and by using a stretch fabric minor adjustments in the position of the seams may be made easily to achieve a pleasing result where the purpose is decorative or to achieve a comfortable result regardless of the purpose. Where the purpose is decorative, a model or a traveller can readily carry a dozen sets of shoe covers in less space than is required for a single pair of shoes. Where the purpose is to match a particular costume the shoe cover may be made of the same fabric as the costume for a perfect match. If the material of which the shoe cover is made is not resilient or is not fabric, slight adjustments may be made in the contour of the blank to match the contours of a particular shoe style. In many cases non-resilient fabric can be cut on the bias to achieve a resilient effect.
In using the pouch of this invention, a shoe 90 is placed toe first through the opening bounded by margin
13 until the shoe is fully within the second lobe 12 of pouch 10, with margin 13 around heel 91 of the shoe.
The lobe 11 is then pushed into the shoe to line the inside of the shoe, and the foot of the wearer of the shoe is inserted into the opening defined by edge 99, which now is covered by the part of the pouch generally defined by the imaginary line 17. The insertion of the foot into the shoe stretches lobe 11 taut and in turn stretches lobe 12 taut around the outside of the shoe. The result is a smooth attractive covering for the outside of the shoe and a comfortable lining inside the shoe. The user may carry many alternate colours, fabrics, etc. of the shoe cover of this invention in minimum space and weight.
Although the disclosure hereof is detailed and exact to enable those skilled in the art to practice the invention, the physical embodiments herein disclosed merely exemplify the invention which may be embodied in other specific structures. While the preferred embodiment has been described, the details may be changed without departing from the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.

Claims

1. A cover for use with a shoe having a sole, a heel and an upper, including a toe area, an instep area and a heel area each having internal surfaces and external surfaces; said cover comprising a pouch having a first lobe generally shaped to line the interior surfaces of a shoe, and a second lobe joined to said first lobe and generally shaped to cover the external surface of the shoe, said pouch having an opening to receive the heel of the shoe and to permit insertion of the outer surface of the shoe into the second lobe of said pouch.
2. A cover according to claim 1, wherein said pouch is completely closed except for said opening to receive a shoe heel and wherein said first lobe is continuously joined to said second lobe.
3. A cover according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said pouch is formed of a single piece, said pouch having a seam extending from said opening along the part of said second lobe that covers the sole and the toe of the shoe, and extends to the first lobe along the mid- line of the upper inside of the shoe and across the toe to the sole inside the shoe.
4. A cover according to claim 3, wherein a second seam extends from said opening across the portion of said pouch which covers the external surface of the heel of a shoe and the internal surface of the heel of a shoe. ~ [2
5. A cover according to claim 3, wherein said seam further extends along the portion of the first lobe which covers the inner surface of the sole of a shoe, said seam forming a closed loop from the instep area upwardly around the margin of the upper within the shoe and back down to the instep area.
6. A cover according to claim 5, wherein a second seam extends along the inside of the upper of the shoe to the top of the shoe.
7. A cover according to claim 1 or claim 2, wherein said pouch is formed of at least two pieces.
8. A cover according to any preceding claim, wherein said pouch has no visible seam except at the heel when said cover is on a shoe and said shoe is on a foot.
9. A cover according to any preceding claim, wherein said pouch is formed of a stretchable fabric.
EP89906163A 1988-06-06 1989-06-01 Shoe cover Withdrawn EP0371114A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US07/202,337 US4850122A (en) 1988-06-06 1988-06-06 Shoe cover
US202337 1988-06-06

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP0371114A1 true EP0371114A1 (en) 1990-06-06

Family

ID=22749469

Family Applications (2)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP89305533A Pending EP0346005A1 (en) 1988-06-06 1989-06-01 Shoe cover
EP89906163A Withdrawn EP0371114A1 (en) 1988-06-06 1989-06-01 Shoe cover

Family Applications Before (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP89305533A Pending EP0346005A1 (en) 1988-06-06 1989-06-01 Shoe cover

Country Status (6)

Country Link
US (1) US4850122A (en)
EP (2) EP0346005A1 (en)
JP (1) JPH03501223A (en)
DK (1) DK161358C (en)
PT (1) PT90763A (en)
WO (1) WO1989011808A1 (en)

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US5778564A (en) * 1995-11-09 1998-07-14 Kettner; Mark Changeable shoe cover
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Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
WO1989011808A1 (en) 1989-12-14
DK29190A (en) 1990-02-05
EP0346005A1 (en) 1989-12-13
JPH03501223A (en) 1991-03-22
DK29190D0 (en) 1990-02-05
PT90763A (en) 1989-12-29
DK161358B (en) 1991-07-01
DK161358C (en) 1991-12-09
US4850122A (en) 1989-07-25

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